Dear Steve ~
If it seems like I am framing the answer in an open-ended way, it's because I don't want to be specific at the expense of being right. I have no way of telling if, when Matthew called Jacob the father of Joseph, if Matthew meant that Jacob was Joseph's father, or his stepfather.
But if, just to have a view to perch on, I was to speculate, I'd say that Matthew regarded Jacob as the physical father of Joseph.
SW: ... "If you didn't know what Luke said, would you have any doubt that Jacob was Joseph's father?"
No, but I /do/ know what Luke said. If we didn't know what Luke said, the whole harmonization-question would never have arisen. It wouldn't be a good approach to pretend that readily-available evidence (in this case, Luke's statement) doesn't exist merely for the same of preserving the simplicity of an answer.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
If it seems like I am framing the answer in an open-ended way, it's because I don't want to be specific at the expense of being right. I have no way of telling if, when Matthew called Jacob the father of Joseph, if Matthew meant that Jacob was Joseph's father, or his stepfather.
But if, just to have a view to perch on, I was to speculate, I'd say that Matthew regarded Jacob as the physical father of Joseph.
SW: ... "If you didn't know what Luke said, would you have any doubt that Jacob was Joseph's father?"
No, but I /do/ know what Luke said. If we didn't know what Luke said, the whole harmonization-question would never have arisen. It wouldn't be a good approach to pretend that readily-available evidence (in this case, Luke's statement) doesn't exist merely for the same of preserving the simplicity of an answer.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
